Title: Earthquake Engineering with KNEX
1EarthquakeEngineeringwith KNEX
The Society of Civil and Structural Engineers and
UCSD NEES 4 KIDS Presents
2A Note About Us
What is an Engineer? An engineer is a person with
a degree in one of the many engineering fields.
Generally, engineers design things. In other
words, they make blueprints for things.
What do Structural Engineers do? Structural
Engineers design buildings, bridges, dams, cars,
helicopters, airplanes, satellites, off-shore
platforms, ships and all other facilities
required to sustain loads from various sources-
air pressure, gravity, wind, waves, snow, impact,
earthquakes, temperatures, vibrations, etc.
3Part I Introduction to Earthquake Engineering
- Part I
- Earthquake Phenomena
- Faults Ground Motion
- Measures Magnitude Intensity
- Earthquake Damage
- In America
- Worldwide
- Importance of Earthquakes
- Structural Engineering
- What to Design for
- Lateral Force Resistance
- Common Building Materials
- Foundation Requirements
- Part II
- KNEX Competition
4Tectonic Plates
- Tectonic plates are pieces of the earth that
float on its liquid, molten core of magma. Here
is a video of how the continents moved around
over Earths long history.
(Double c lick the text Continental Drift.wmv)
5Fault Types
A fault is where two tectonic plates (or
continents) meet. Earthquakes happen when two
tectonic plates rub against each other. There
are many different kinds of faults, depending on
how the plates meet each other. You will
probably learn more about this later in class, if
you havent already.
Left Lateral Strike Slip
Right Lateral Strike Slip
San Andreas Fault
Reverse Fault
http//www.iris.washington.edu/seismic/events/fau
lts.html
Pictures http//www.ngdc.noaa.gov
6Seismic Waves
Volunteer Demo!
http//www.lamit.ro/sistem-avertizare-cutremur.htm
7Ground Motion Intensity and Magnitude
A magnitude of an earthquake is the same no
matter where you are, but the intensity changes
due to the location. Some spots may feel an
earthquake more than others not necessarily
because of how far away it is from the center (or
epicenter), but because of the soil it is on,
what fault it is, and many other factors.
Intensities
Magnitude
Epicenter
(after Mavroeidis and Papageorgiou
8Societal Impact
Question What reasons can you think of that make
an earthquake dangerous?
- Think about the complexity of a city
- Answer Some dangers are
- Power lines fall and electricity goes out.
- Phone lines fall so phones dont work.
- Water and sewage pipes break, and sometimes
sewage can get into water sources - Gas pipes break, causing fires (like San
Fransisco Earthquake). And if water pipes break,
fire trucks cant use fire hydrants. - Roads, bridges, and tunnels are ruined so
emergency vehicles cant get to people who need
help.
9Earthquake Damage
1906 San Francisco Earthquake (M7.7 est.) 3000
deaths
This is one of the most famous earthquakes in
American history. Before this, modern America
hadnt really experienced a natural disaster.
Most of the buildings were made of bricks and
collapsed in the quake, and the fires that
resulted from the quake were just as damaging as
the quake itself. You may have had ancestors
that experienced this historical earthquake.
Pictures http//www.ngdc.noaa.gov
10Earthquake Damage
1995 Kobe, Japan (M6.7) 5,500 deaths
11Kobe Earthquake Video
- This is a man who is inside a skyscraper building
during the Kobe Earthquake. The man is a white
blob in the lower right corner.
(Double c lick the text Kobe Movie.wmv)
12Most Recently
2004 Great Indian Ocean Earthquake (M9.1) 230,000
deaths resulting in the famous tsunami.
http//whyfiles.org/094quake/index.php?g3.txt
2005 Kashmir Earthquake (M7.6) 74,000 deaths
http//www.himalmag.com/2005/november/commentary_3
.html
13China Earthquake of 2008
- May 12, 2008 in Sichuan province of China. Killed
at least 69,000, less than three months before
China hosted the world in the 2008 Summer
Olympics. - 374,176 injured, with 18,222 listed as missing.
- At least 4.8 million people homeless (a million
more than the population of the city of LA). - Magnitued 8.0. 19th deadliest earthquake of all
time. - The epicenter was in Wenchuan County.
14Two Story Wood Frame House
Here are two videos of a house on a shake table
at UCSD. Dont worry, no one actually lives in
this house. It was built only to be tested for
this earthquake. In the first video (House
Test-5), do you think the house will stay
standing? Why or why not? In the second video
(House Test-6), what are some hazardous things in
this bedroom?
Outside of House (Double c lick the text House
Test-5.mpg)
Inside Room of House (Double c lick the text
House Test-6.mpg)
15Liquefaction
- All soil has water in it (even in the desert).
However, in an earthquake, the water is shaken
loose and can make the soil act like a liquid,
much like quick sand.
16Mid-rise Reinforced Concrete Building
This is a video of a 7-story concrete tower that
was on a real-life shake table. The building was
only for testing and was destroyed after this
earthquake simulation. This shake table is
currently the worlds largest (in terms of area),
and is actually located here in San Diego.
Pretty cool, huh?
(Double c lick the text Eq4_cut.wmv)
17Earthquake (Close Up)
This is a video of the same building during the
same shake, but the view is of the base of the
tower.
After the shake, the building was ruled as still
structurally safe, which is what the structural
engineers who designed the tower want to hear.
(Double c lick the text Eq4_CornerCrack_cut.wmv)
18What do Structural Engineers Do?
- Design the Skeleton of the Structure to safely
take on forces that they are exposed to. - They Consider Gravity
- Self Weight, Live Loads (People, Furniture, Cars)
- Lateral Loads (Forces that hit from the sides)
- Wind and Earthquakes
Uncalculated forces from wind made the Tacoma
bridge collapse (built and destroyed in 1940).
19Stronger is Not Always Better
- Brittle Something that is brittle is very stiff
and easy to break (like chalk). Brittle building
materials do not hold up very well in
earthquakes. - Ductile Something that is ductile bends when
under pressure (like an eraser). Ductile building
materials are much better at absorbing earthquake
shaking, therefore making it harder for them to
collapse.
Demo!
20Base Isolation
This video is of a base isolator. A base
isolator is something that the building sits on
top of, so that when the ground shakes, only the
isolator moves but the building stays still.
Most base isolators are made of layers of very
stiff rubber and steel.
(Double c lick the text Base Isolator Editted
clip.wmv)
www.dis-inc.com China Basin Addition, 185 Berry
St. San Francisco, A Unique Application of Base
Isolation Technology
21Base Isolators
22Burj Dubai Tallest Building
Construction began on 21 September 2004, and the
tower is expected to be completed and ready for
occupancy by September 2009. The total budget
for the Burj Dubai project is about US4.1
billion. 818 meters tall (8 football fields).
162 floors. Taller than two Empire State
Building. Includes a Hotel, 4 swimming pools,
apartments, and tallest observation deck. Holds
multiple tune mass dampeners to counteract
earthquake and wind forces. Built by a
strucutural engineering company in Chicago
Tune Mass Dampener
http//www1.cs.columbia.edu/sedwards/photos/taiwa
n200508/
23Burj Dubai
View from top of Burj Dubai. Those or 40-50
story buildings down there (like downtown SD)!
24Building Material
- Wood Most Common
- Pros Good Seismic Performance
- Cons Can only build up to 4 story buildings.
Catches on Fire, Rots, Kills Trees - Masonry (Bricks, Stone)
- Pros Good in Compression, Fire Proof
- Cons Bad Seismic Performance if not reinforced
25Building Material
- Reinforced Concrete
- Pros Cons More Expensive
- Steel
- Pros Can build very tall buildings. Very
Ductile/Flexible. - Cons Susceptible to Fire and corrosion
- Composites
- Pros Strong and Light
- Cons Expensive
26Concrete Buildings
nisee.berkeley.edu/taiwan/
1999 Taiwan (M7.7) 2,295 deaths
Some countries can not afford to pay for good
materials or good engineers to build their
buildings. These buildings are particularly
unsafe in earthquakes.
27Beams
EERI, University of Notre Dame
- Beams span between columns and hold up the floors
- Load is transferred from the floor to the beams
into the columns and down to the foundation.
Beam
Demo!
KNEX Education
Foundation
28Columns
EERI, University of Notre Dame
Column
- Columns support the building (Gravity Loads)
- Slender Columns - Buckling
Demo!
KNEX Education
Foundation
29Forces
Demo!
KNEX Education
30Braced Frames (Steel)
Braces
Volunteer Demo!
Foundation
31Concentric Braces
Arnold, C. and Reitherman, R., Building
Configuration and Seismic Design, Wiley, 1982
32Concentric X-Braces
Pictures C.M. Uang
33Steel Connections
Pictures C.M. Uang
34Questions?
35Part II KNEX Structure Competition
- Competition Prompt
- The different roles
- Building With KNEX
- Awards (and prizes)
36Whats going on?
- A rich land owner wants you to build a tall and
distinctive Steel building in downtown San Diego
near an active fault for him. The owner plans to
rent out the building space for families. The
goal is to make a model out of KNEX of a cool or
beautiful building with lots of floor space for
the owner to make more rent money. You will be
placed in a four-person Design-Build team and you
will compete against your school to win the
contract to design and build this new building.
Awards will be given to teams who do the best in
certain areas.
37How do Earthquakes affect KNEX?
This is a video of an example structure on a
shake table like the one yours will be on.
Notice that there are not weights on this
structure, but there will be on yours! These
weights simulate people, machines, furniture and
other things that would be present in real life.
(Double c lick the text KNEX Shake.wmv)
38The 4 Types of People Involved
- Who the UCSD Students are
- Owner Wants a tall beautiful building in
Downtown San Diego, to rent out for money. We
(The UCSD students) are the owner since we
bought you the knex. You and your team will
play the other roles. - Who YOU are. NOTE Every person in a group helps
play each role. One role is NOT assigned per one
person. Every one helps with everything! - Architect Designs the overall shape and Skin
of the building for the Owner. Wants the building
to be beautiful - Engineer Designs the Skeleton to hold up the
Skin. Wants the building to survive a major
earthquake - Contractor Builds what the Architect and
Engineer have designed for the Owner on time and
on budget.
39Architectural Rendering
- Architectural Rendering of Building
- 3-D or multiple view 2-D Drawings
- Color
- Landscape (Plants Trees)
- Windows, Doors, Building Signs, Balconies
- People
- Make the building look cool or beautiful, so the
owner will like it!
40Examples
41Structural Engineering
- Design Skeleton (beams, columns, braces)
- Building must survive Earthquake
- Structural Performance Index (Time on Table)
Structural Calculations You will Make
- Floor Area (for each floor and total)
- Building Cost
- Owners Performance Index (Total floor space
divided by building cost)
42Construction Drawings
- When making your drawings, be sure to include the
measurements of the width, height, and length - You will need to make many views (for each floor,
as well as from two different sides of the
building) - Anyone should be able to build your building from
your construction drawings
43Awards
- There are many awards to be won1) The building
that stays standing with the best Owners
Performance Index - 2) The group with the best (most beautiful)
architectural rendering. - 3) The group with the most understandable
construction drawings and best interview. - 4) Perhaps some mystery awards.
There will be prizes!!! (TBA Later)
44Final Questions?
45Sources/Resources
- http//www.abag.ca.gov/bayarea/eqmaps/fixit/quiz/i
ndex.html - http//geopubs.wr.usgs.gov/fact-sheet/fs068-03/fs0
68-03.pdf - http//www.holmesgroup.com/baseisolation.html
- http//www.sdsheriff.net/ccweb/building.htm
- http//www.exploratorium.edu/faultline/engineering
/engineering5.html - http//www.lacityhall.org/isohow.html
- http//www.hepc.go.jp/english/pdf/GHEQ_A.pdf
- http//www.hepc.go.jp/english/04a01_1.html
- http//192.107.65.2/GLIS/HTML/gn/turchi/g5turchi.h
tm - http//www.tfhrc.gov/pubrds/04jan/09.htm
- http//www.djc.com/news/co/11134804.html
- http//www.earthquakeprotection.com/benicia_martin
ez_bridge.html - http//www.earthquakeprotection.com/product2.html
- http//www.palldynamics.com/main.htm
- http//www.tdx.cesca.es/TESIS_UPC/AVAILABLE/TDX-12
17103-104653/03Chapt02.pdf - http//www.takenaka.co.jp/takenaka_e/news_e/pr0011
/m0011_05.htm - http//structures.ucsd.edu
- http//www1.cs.columbia.edu/sedwards/photos/taiwa
n200508/20050814-152320Tuned20Mass20Damper20Ta
ipei20101.jpg.html - http//webshaker.ucsd.edu